● Barnwell, David. "The Southern Cousins" in The Irish
Literary Supplement (1989). Interesting article about the
Irish in Argentina, including details and examples of their
daily life in the camp. Contrary to almost every
study on this subject written in English, Spanish quotes
are correctly accented, have no orthographic errors, and
they even have eñes!

● Barry,
Carolina. "Ciento Treinta Años andando su senda"
in The Southern Cross 130: 5896 (January 2005), pp.
1-2. A short history of The Southern Cross in its 130th
anniversary.

● Barry, Carolina. "La Primera Convención de la Raza Irlandesa
en Sudamérica" in The Southern Cross 129: 5883 (January 2004), p. 3. The article accounts for the connections
between the Irish-Argentine community and Westmeath-born Laurence Ginnell (1852-1923), who was one of the early Irish diplomatic
envoys to Argentina. Using original sources (for instance,
El Boletín Irlandés, Buenos Aires, 1921) the author
describes the events leading to the establishment of a delegation
to the Irish Race Congress in Paris (1922). See also the article
by Michael Kennedy, below. [document]

●Bedson, Derek. "Butlers in South America" in
Journal of The Butler Society (Suffolk) 3:2
(1988-1989), pp. 197-201. Includes Butlers from
Argentina and
Uruguay.

● Bergin, L.D. "From Carlow, he founded
Argentina's first English newspaper" in Carloviana,
Journal of the Old Carlow Society 46 (1998), pp. 12-13. Short
biography of Edward T. Mulhall (1832-1899), founder of The
Standard of Buenos Aires.

●
Bulfin, William. Tales of the Pampas (Buenos Aires:
L.O.L.A., 1997). Bilingual edition: English text with an
introduction and glossary by novelist Susan Wilkinson. Spanish
text with an introduction by the translator, Alejandro Clancy.First edition by Fisher & Unwin (London, 1900).
Short stories written by the editor of The Southern Cross
between 1896 and 1906. William Bulfin (1862-1910) was a
journalist, story-teller, and sportsman (he introduced hurling
in Argentina), with good connections in Ireland, Argentina
and the Vatican City. The context is the life of the estancias
and the work of the gauchos and the owners (principally
Irish) during those years. The 1997 edition was published
'as an inverted book, with double cover, and separate pagination
for English and Spanish' (from the editor's notice on the
back cover). Considering the difficulties of translating
into Spanish the 19th C oral and technical jargon spoken
by Bulfin's characters, the Spanish version is a fine piece
of translation. It was made by a local writer, Alejandro
Clancy, whose forefathers originally came to Argentina in
the 1840's. See review of Laura Izarra's article on William
Bulfin, The Irish Diaspora in Argentina, below.

●Bredin, A.E.C. A History of the Irish Soldier
(Belfast: Century Books, 1987). Irish regiments in the British
campaigns 1806-07.

●
Bushe, Andrew. "RTE doc recalls Argies 'Gaucho' Irish"
in The Irish Echo 75: 23 (June 5-11, 2002).
The author comments on a documentary produced by RTÉ and screened on July, 2002,
about the Irish in Argentina. Accounts on Gaynor, Duggan,
Kenny and other affluent immigrants who 'established themselves
as the "Gaucho" Irish -- some of the biggest landowners in
the whole of South America' belong to the contribution discourse
about this immigration.

●
Cabrejas, María, and Fernando Nogueira. "La Santa Cruz: refugio de resistencia" Documentary film about the life, struggle and kidnapping of the "Group of 12", including the French nuns and the founders of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, and the infiltration of Astiz. Available to download here http://peliculasantacruz.blogspot.com/

●
Cané, Gonzalo. Anécdotas de Irlandeses en la Historia
Argentina (unpublished manuscript). Articles prepared for publishing
in The Southern Cross, including stories about Admiral William
Brown and Irish nineteenth-century settlers and soldiers (eg., Leopoldo
Lynch, John Thomond O'Brien, John Murtagh, Julián O'Roarke,
John King, Peter Campbell and Patrick Island). Original
accounts of Irish Argentines in San Andrés de Giles and
Baradero.

●
Club San Cyrano. Rugby and hockey club founded by Saint
Cyran's School alumni. [website]

●
Coghlan, Eduardo A. (ed.). Andanzas de un Irlandés en
el Campo Porteño 1845-1864 (Buenos Aires: Ediciones
Culturales Argentinas, 1981). Originally titled The
Customs and Habits of the Country of Buenos Ayres from the
year 1845, these are the memoirs of
John Brabazon translated into Spanish and annotated by genealogist
Eduardo A. Coghlan. John Brabazon was a member of a Co.
Westmeath Protestant family, who settled in Argentina in
1845 (Coghlan 1987, p. 53). Brabazon's memoirs report
with simple language the adventures and misfortunes of the
author in the pampas, including the barbarous murder of
his first wife. Includes photos and a facsimile of the English
original manuscript (two pages), which remains unpublished.
According to Patrick McKenna
(1994), a copy of the English manuscript was handed to him
in the Irish embassy in Buenos Aires.

●
Coghlan, Eduardo A. El Aporte de los Irlandeses a la
Formación de la Nación Argentina (Buenos Aires, 1982). Table
I: passengers arrived in Buenos Aires from 1822 to 1880.
Sources for this table include the files of the Archivo
General de la Nación ('Libros de Entradas de Pasajeros'
1822-1862), and the arrival lists published by 'The Standard' newspaper from 1863 to 1880. The author
selected the passenger names presumably of Irish origin
and sorted all entries alphabetically [website].
Table II: Irish family names in Buenos Aires (city
and province) from 1855 Census. Table III: Irish
family names in Buenos Aires (city and province) from 1869
Census. Table IV: Irish family names in Argentina
from 1895 Census. The last three tables are sorted geographically,
but there is an alphabetic index of all Tables elaborated
by Miguel A. Mathé Murray (page v). Approximately
32,000 persons are mentioned throughout 645 pages.

● Coghlan, Eduardo A. Los Irlandeses
en la Argentina: Su Actuación y Descendencia (Buenos
Aires, 1987). Irish settlers in Argentina, including
their origins in Ireland and their descendants in the River
Plate or elsewhere. Entries are arranged alphabetically
by male immigrant. Other contents include a chronicle of
the Irish in Argentina, sketches of 413 livestock brands
owned by Irish-Argentine estancieros, 'La Heráldica Irlandesa'
by Félix F. Martín y Herrera, and 182 Irish coats of arms.
It includes press clips, photographs, and documents. Published
privately, with contributions from the Cultural Relations
Committee of the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs, and
from private supporters (list on p. 959). Major sources:
Coghlan (1982), The Southern Cross,
The Standard,
Handbook of the River Plate, The Story of the Irish
Race (MacManus, Seumas, New York: 1921), The History
of Ireland from the earliest period to the present time
(Haverty, Martin, New York, 1857), Irish Pedigrees
or the Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation (O’Hart,
John, New York, 1923) [website], Irish families; their names, arms, and origins
(MacLysght, Edward, New York: Crown Publishers, 1972), More
Irish families (MacLysght, Edward, Galway: O'Gorman,
1960), Murray (1919), and Registro de Marcas de Hacienda
de la Provincia de Buenos Aires (Parle, Estevan, Liverpool:
Brown & Rawcliffe, 1885), as well as wills, church and
civil records, family private documents and interviews.
Eduardo Coghlan (1912-1997) was the most notable Irish-Argentine
genealogist. 'Los Irlandeses en la Argentina' is his masterpiece,
a monumental book of 963 (awkwardly bound) pages, including
more than 3,600 Irish immigrants and their families. In
Wherever Green is Worn, The Story of the Irish Diaspora
(London, 2000: 640), Tim Pat Coogan mentions that 'Coghlan’s
work is today the most consulted reference work in the [Buenos
Aires] Irish Embassy.' In spite of the relatively implicit
chauvinism and of the insistence on linking members of the
Irish race to the local landed bourgeoisie and to
the European aristocracy, 'this book is an invaluable source
for any research concerning the Irish-Argentine community'
(Guillermo MacLoughlin, The Forgotten People).

●
Colegio Cardenal Newman, the Christian Brothers' boys school
for local affluent families. Founded in 1948, it still has
one of the most expensive tuitions parents can afford for
a private school in Argentina. Strategically located in
an exclusive area North of Buenos Aires, the school has
another institution for poorer families in Buenos Aires,
Colegio Edmundo Rice, also managed by the Christian Brothers.
Cardenal Newman is a prestigious name in the Argentinean
rugby championship. [website]

●
Colegio Santa Brígida. The 'Asociación Católica Irlandesa'
founded this girls school in 1899, initially aimed at orphans
and daughters of poor Irish-Argentine families living in
the provinces. [website]

●
Connaughton, Michael G. "The Last Connaughton in
Argentina" in The Westmeath Examiner (Mullingar), 11
November 2006.

●
Donlon, Mary, The Irish Argentines: The Longford-Westmeath
Connection, in: Teathba, Review of the Longford Historical
Society (vol. 2, number 3, November 1992, pp. 207-214). The
author claims that 'the Irish Argentine is practically synonymous
with Longford-Westmeath, since at least two-thirds of the
Irish-Argentine families have their origins in places such
as Ballymahon, Legan, Carrickboy, Edgeworthstown, Ardagh,
Ballinacarrigy, Mullingar, its hinterland and even from Moydow.'
She provides the perspective of an Irish historian from Meeltenagh,
Moydow (Co. Longford), whose grand-uncle, Barney Fox, emigrated
to Argentina in 1900. In the first part, the Irish immigration
during the 19th century is described in detail, including
the well-know role of the Catholic church and the chain immigration
scheme used by the settler families. In the second part, the
experiences of the Fox family are developed with interesting
details on the integration to the local culture.